Ant-man's new ride? Scientists discover 1,306-legged insect
A female millipede of the newly identified species Eumillipes persephone discovered deep underground in Australia. (Reuters Photo)


In a mining region of Australia, deep underground in an exploratory drill hole, scientists have discovered what they described as a "marvel of nature" as they unearthed a remarkably elongated blind millipede that has turned out to possess the most legs of any known animal – 1,306 to be precise.

The threadlike pale-colored millipede measures about 95 millimeters (3.74 inches) long and about 0.95 millimeters wide, with a conical head, beak-shaped mouth and large antennae – likely one of its only sources of sensory input because it lacks eyes, scientists said on Thursday.

"Previously no known millipede actually had 1,000 legs despite the name millipede meaning 'thousand feet,'" said Virginia Tech entomologist Paul Marek, lead author of the research published in the journal Scientific Reports.

The creature is called Eumillipes Persephone. The handful of organisms discovered lived up to almost 60 meters (200 feet) underground. Females had more legs than males.

A microscopic view of the legs of a male individual of the newly identified millipede species Eumillipes persephone discovered deep underground in Australia. (Reuters Photo)

"In my opinion, this is a stunning animal, a marvel of evolution," said study co-author Bruno Buzatto, a principal biologist at Bennelongia Environmental Consultants in Perth, Australia.

"It represents the most extreme elongation found to date in millipedes, which were the first animals to conquer the land. And this species, in particular, managed to adapt to living tens of meters deep in the soil, in an arid and harsh landscape where it is very hard to find any millipedes surviving in the surface," Buzatto added.

Until now, the leggiest animal known was a California millipede species called Illacme plenipes, with 750 legs.

The researchers suspect that evolving so many legs helped Eumillipes.

"We believe that the large number of legs provides an advantage in terms of traction/force to push their bodies forward through small gaps and fractures in the soil where they live," Buzatto said.

The species lives in complete darkness in a subterranean habitat loaded with iron and volcanic rocks. Lacking eyes, it uses other senses such as touch and smell to perceive its environment. It belongs to a family of fungi-eating millipedes, so the researchers suspect that is what it eats.

A microscopic view of the head and reproductive appendages called gonopods of a male individual of the newly identified eyeless millipede species Eumillipes persephone discovered deep underground in Australia. (Reuters Photo)

It was discovered in Western Australia state's Goldfields-Esperance region, where miners dig for gold and other minerals, including lithium and vanadium. Four Eumillipes individuals were described in the study and another four have been found. However, none of them were observed alive.

One of the adult females described in the study had 1,306 legs and the other had 998. One of the two adult males had 818 legs and the other had 778.

The number of legs is not uniform within millipede species because they molt – shedding their tough outer layer – grow and add four-legged segments throughout their life.

"It's quite common in millipedes for individuals to gain more legs as they molt so that older individuals have more legs than juveniles," Buzatto said.

Typically millipedes have about 100 to 200 legs. After millipedes, centipedes have the greatest number of legs, up to as many as 382. Centipedes have one pair of legs per body segment while millipedes have two pairs.

The newly discovered creature's scientific name means "true thousand feet" and references Persephone, the queen of the underworld in ancient Greek mythology.

Millipedes – slow-moving arthropods related to centipedes, insects and crustaceans – first appeared more than 400 million years ago.

Roughly 13,000 species are known today, living in all sorts of environments, feeding on decaying vegetation and fungi. They play an essential ecosystem role by breaking down the matter on which they feed, freeing up its constituent parts such as carbon, nitrogen and simple sugars.

"These nutrients can then be used by future generations of life," Marek said.